TY - BOOK AU - edited by Marmodoro, Anna and Hill, Jonathan TI - The author's voice in classical and late antiquity SN - 9780199670567 U1 - 880.9 PY - 2013/// CY - New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Authorship KW - History KW - Greek literature KW - History and criticism KW - Latin literature N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; I. AUTHORS AND THEIR MANIFESTATIONS 1.1 The third person 1. The poet in the Iliad Barbara Graziosi 2. Xenophon's and Caesar's third-person narratives—or are they? Christopher Felling 1.2 The dialogic voice 3. Listening to many voices: Athenian tragedy as popular art William Allan and Adrian Kelly 4. 'When I read my Cato, it is as if Cato speaks': the birth and evolution of Cicero's dialogic voice Sarah Culpepper Stroup 5. Author and speaker(s) in Horace's Satires 2 Stephen Harrison 1.3 The first person 6. 'I, Polybius': self-conscious didacticism? Georgina Longley 7. Drip-feed invective: Pliny, self-fashioning, and the Regulus letters Rhiannon Ash 8. An I for an I: reading fictional autobiography Tim Whitmarsh II. AUTHORS AND AUTHORITY 9. Ille ego qui quondam: on authorial (an)onymity Irene Peirano 10. Authorship and authority in Greek fictional letters A. D. Morrison 11. Plato's religious voice; Socrates as godsent, in Plato and the Platonists Michael Erler 12. When the dead speak: the refashioning of Ignatius of Antioch in the long recension of his letters Mark Edwards 13. Ars in their 'I's: authority and authorship in Graeco-Roman visual culture Michael Squire ER -